• Pierpaolo Buzza

    Pierpaolo Buzza - Artistic Director, Trainer

    Pierpaolo Buzza is a professional improviser, director, author and actor from Italy, currently based in Belgium. He performs, teaches and directs theatre (scripted and unscripted) at all levels. He has been doing this job since 2006, creating and playing formats of all kinds: from short form games to dramatic long form, and everything in between.

    He is or has been a playwright, stand up comedian, sketch writer, radio author, and math teacher, but that’s completely another story.

    When he’s not in Belgium, he’s teaching and performing Improv around the world.
    He has a portrait in his attic that gets old in his place.

    pierpaolo@improbrussels.com

  • Desi Krsteva - Director of Didactics, Trainer

    Desi is a professional actress and improviser, trianed in different techniques such as Stanislavski, Meisner, Chekhov, Laban and many others. ​
    Improv is her biggest passion and she had her own duoprov - “The Sudden Knot” and a troup called “Loophole Improv

    She is an acting/improv trainer and performer for Impro Brussels, Queen City Comedy, Highwire Improv, The Bridge Theatre, Brussels Shakespeare Society and Cultural Creative Corner.​

    Desi never stops learning from other professionals and developing her onstage and offstage skills. Her new passions are piano and trumpet playing and singing.

    desi@improbrussels.com

  • Gabriele Tallone - Trainer

    Gabriele Tallone is still claiming to be in his 20s (just). He was only a teenager when he started working as a handyman in a theatre in Italy, and since then he has been addicted to drama – on and off stage. He discovered improvisational theatre in Impro Brussels, which quickly became his greatest passion. You can find him at most improv workshops and shows in the capital of Europe.

    During the day Gabriele loves talking about politics to anyone who will listen. He is a fan of folk music and good movies. He has recently started going to the gym, after being compared to a Chupa Chups, in the hope of making his head look smaller. When not on stage with Impro Brussels, you can find him here.

    gabriele@improbrussels.com

  • Frank Wertelaers - Trainer

    My very first improv class was way back in 2001 and I still remember driving home that first evening with the feeling 'This is it'. What followed can not be better described as a rollercoaster of happiness. I took all the courses I could find, went to festivals, became part of a group, started my own and another and I started teaching as of 2005 and so coaching groups in Belgium and Holland, I (co)organised improv festivals. I was asked to be a spokesperson for amateur improv theatre within Opendoek, the umbrella organisation for amateur performing arts in Flanders. I also discovered the world of scripted theatre.
    And last but not least I'm trying to write the history of Improv in Flanders and Brussels (only the English part) and regarding the latter, I'm proud to be part of this history in Brussels!
    Where else to find me: Noevoo-T (coaching, AIN, art project ET TRANGER)
    Meeza Longform Impro (co-founder/player)
    Wildemonie (player)
    Guest player and/or light improvisor for SwiepLight
    improvisor for RIOT

    frank@improbrussels.com

  • Impro - Penguin

    Penguins look cute and clumsy, but really, they’re very agile. Have you ever seen them underwater? They chase fish! Pure metaphor for improvisation.

    Penguins have one of the strongest sense of community of all the animal kingdom. To survive the freezing winds of the winter in Antartica, they form a circle, all facing inwards. Those closer to the center are warm, those on the edges get all the wind on their back; in order to protect everyone, there is a slow “current of penguins” costantly pushing towards the center those on the edge, and vice versa. Which is another great metaphor for improvisation.

    There are 17 species of penguins, all different, but associated by a common concept of Penguinitude. Just like the improvisers!

    Some penguins, after years of trial and error, actually manage to fly for small distances*

    When you put together the Chinese ideograms for “goose” and for “business”, you get the word “penguin”. Which is kind of funny, if you take a second to think of a goose in business.

    Penguins remain faithful to their spouse until the penguin chick is old enough to afford their own rent.

    [* I just made this up, but wouldn’t it be cool if they did?]

    info@improbrussels.com

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